00:03:57.000This was hardly any different than SARS or anything else.
00:04:00.000And the study that I'm referring to in particular says that the herd immunity threshold for coronavirus, in other words, the percentage of the population at which you've achieved herd immunity that you don't really have to worry about the spread of the virus anymore, is 20%, according to new research.
00:04:21.000And the assumption that we've been working off of for the better part of four months now is that the herd immunity threshold for the virus.
00:04:33.000In other words, the going wisdom was that 70 to 80% of the population would have to get the virus in order for us to have any kind of natural organic immunity from this catastrophic and deadly novel coronavirus.
00:04:48.000Now they're saying it's like between 10 and 20%, which is a lot less.
00:04:52.000And in many places, we've already reached it, which means that we are virtually safe from the virus in those places.
00:04:59.000And there's no need for lockdowns, there's no need even for masks.
00:05:03.000Or hand sanitizer, or anything like that.
00:05:06.000So that's just one example of new research, but that is going to be our main story tonight, going over a lot of the new numbers and the new data.
00:05:14.000It's been a long time, obviously, that we've been dealing with this phenomenon, and now there's a lot more information.
00:05:21.000There's a lot more science, a lot more research.
00:05:26.000I know that in the news for the past few weeks, that has been the only thing that they've been talking about is the second wave of coronavirus.
00:05:35.000And it's been horrible because that means that.
00:06:21.000We'll also be talking tonight about a very different study, and this study is not pertaining to the coronavirus.
00:06:27.000This new study is pertaining to black reparations.
00:06:33.000I'm sure maybe some of you have seen this, but this was in the Washington Examiner earlier this week.
00:06:38.000There was a new study that was put out, I think it was this week or last week, and it said that the total cost.
00:06:45.000Of reparations to black Americans or the descendants of black slaves in America would be four quadrillion, quadrillion dollars.
00:06:59.000And if you don't have an idea of what that number looks like, that is a thousand times greater than a trillion.
00:07:07.000So you've got a hundred, a thousand, a million, a billion, one trillion, and then a one thousand trillions.
00:07:17.000Is one quadrillion, four quadrillion dollars.
00:07:20.000That is the estimated cost of what we white people owe to blacks in America for slavery, allegedly.
00:07:30.000It's worth pointing out to give you a sense of the scale that we're talking about that the entire global economy, the whole world economy, the GDP is 80 trillion dollars.
00:07:46.000So if you take that and multiply it by 50, If I think I'm doing the math correctly there, and I think I am, you take the entire global economy and multiply it by 50, you have the value of the reparations that we owe to the descendants of slaves.
00:08:06.000I thought they were just picking cotton.
00:08:08.000I thought they were just picking cotton and maybe doing some dusting or doing some cleaning or something.
00:08:15.000That's worth 50 times the size of the global economy, which would mean that.
00:08:21.000Take all the value of the global economy that that produces in one year for 50 years, and we're paying that back to 13% of the American population.
00:08:39.000You thought that taxes were too high, you thought that college tuition was too expensive, housing prices are out of control.
00:08:47.000Well, let's just wait until we're saddled with the debt.
00:08:52.000Of $4 quadrillion for our black reparations.
00:08:55.000So, we'll talk about that study as well as some other developments pertaining to reparations.
00:09:00.000The scary thing is, we're moving in that direction because in North Carolina and in Rhode Island and in California, they're all moving ahead and they're all in different stages, but they're in various stages of pushing their city governments and state governments towards reparations for blacks.
00:09:58.000I had to drive all the way downtown because the place that I went to last time was just ridiculous.
00:10:03.000The two local places that I go to, and I don't know if you've been watching the show for a long time, maybe you remember this, but I was going to this one place that was local, and it was this white guy, and he just, you know, gave me kind of a crappy haircut every time.
00:10:17.000It wasn't, you know, the worst haircut in the world, but it wasn't great.
00:10:22.000I never left thinking, like, wow, this is really something, you know?
00:10:26.000And then I went to this other place where it was Muslims.
00:10:28.000It was like this dark skinned Muslim guy who hardly spoke English, and he did a pretty good job, but.
00:10:35.000I guess he doesn't work there anymore.
00:10:37.000So, when I got my haircut after the pandemic, it was this different guy, and he butchered the hair.
00:10:43.000It was maybe one of the worst haircuts I've ever gotten.
00:13:59.000You could probably find some of the re uploads on YouTube.
00:14:02.000Again, I don't like that that's being done because I have all the shows uploaded on my website, which I pay a lot of money to host every month.
00:14:10.000So if you're uploading my content on YouTube, you're kind of stealing from me because it's not cheap to host 1,300 hours of content and have thousands of people watching it.
00:14:40.000One more thing before we dive in the news.
00:14:42.000This wasn't a big story, but this was a tweet that I saw.
00:14:45.000And I just want to comment a little bit on this because, you know, at this point, if you're not getting what's happening in the country, what are we supposed to do with you?
00:14:56.000Like, I don't understand how you could look at the situation that we're in as a nation with the George Floyd protests and Black Lives Matter and all this antipathy towards white people and the president.
00:15:09.000I don't know how you could look at the world that we've been living in for thousands of years or millions of years and not understand what's going on here.
00:15:18.000And day after day, I share with you stories like this to try and wake you up, just to show you.
00:15:25.000A lot of people say, I need a source on this.
00:15:57.000It says The National Museum of African American History and Culture wants to make you aware of certain signs of whiteness, which include individualism, hard work, objectivity, the nuclear family, progress, respect for authority, delayed gratification, and more.
00:16:15.000And this tweet was about this study from the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which, if you don't know what that is, if you've ever been to Washington, D.C., that's that giant, ugly building that looks like a pile of shit.
00:16:30.000You know, you've got all these magnificent, classical architecture, memorials, and monuments and buildings.
00:16:38.000You've got the Capitol building, the White House, and the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial.
00:16:44.000And then you've got this disgusting, postmodern, brown.
00:16:49.000Pile of poo that is the African American Museum.
00:16:53.000And, you know, it's no comment on what's inside the museum, just the architecture is terrible.
00:16:59.000And I'll read you a little excerpt from the study.
00:17:01.000From this tweet, basically, you know, we can glean that what's in the study is it says that, you know, basically everything that it means to be an American is actually a sign of whiteness, which imagine that, right?
00:17:15.000So I'll read you a little excerpt from the study.
00:17:20.000It says, quote, whiteness, this is from the museum.
00:17:23.000By the way, it says, whiteness and white racialized identity refer to the way that white people, their customs, culture, and beliefs, operate as the standard by which all other groups are compared.
00:17:35.000Whiteness is also at the core of understanding race in America.
00:17:39.000Whiteness and the normalization of white racial identity throughout America's history have created a culture where non white persons are seen as inferior or abnormal.
00:17:49.000This white dominant culture also operates as a social mechanism.
00:17:54.000That grants advantages to white people since they can navigate society both by feeling normal and by being viewed as normal.
00:18:02.000Persons who identify as white rarely have to think about their racial identity because they live within a culture where whiteness has been normalized.
00:18:11.000Thinking about race is very different for non white persons living in America.
00:18:15.000People of color must always consider their racial identity, whatever the situation, due to the systemic and interpersonal racism that still exists.
00:18:25.000Whiteness also exists as everyday microaggressions towards people of color.
00:18:31.000Acts of microaggressions include verbal, nonverbal, and environmental slights, snubs, or insults towards non whites.
00:18:39.000Whether intentional or not, these attitudes communicate hostile, derogatory, or harmful messages.
00:18:45.000And then there is a quote by Toni Morrison, the novelist, who says In this country, American means white.
00:18:56.000And some of the examples they give of whiteness in America, that's just a lot of crap.
00:19:02.000That's a lot of nonsense from some black sociologist or some Jewish sociologist.
00:19:08.000But they actually provide a neat little graphic to help explain when they're talking about this white racial identity, which is so normalized that you might not even be aware of it.
00:19:19.000Here are a few examples of the things that they're talking about.
00:19:23.000And this is a list from this graphic provided by the museum.
00:19:27.000Some of these examples include rugged individualism.
00:20:30.000Man's attractiveness based on economic status, power, intellect.
00:20:34.000Holidays based on Christian religions, justice based on English common law, protecting property rights and entitlements, and also things like competition, such as decision making, majority rules, aggressiveness, action orientation.
00:20:51.000And I read through this list, and honestly, and I've said this before, I actually agree with large swaths of this.
00:21:01.000And what is amazing is that a lot of white people.
00:21:05.000Will look at this list and they'll look at this from the African American Museum and they'll say, and I've seen this said too by Don Jr. and a few other prominent conservatives.
00:21:16.000They look at this list and they look at this study from the museum and they say, What?
00:22:00.000This isn't coming from the KKK or white supremacists saying that being on time is a white phenomenon, believing in rational thinking is a white phenomenon, believing in hard work is a white phenomenon.
00:22:14.000No, this is the African American History Museum, presumably written by.
00:22:20.000The most woke POC, BLM activists that you could find.
00:22:23.000And they're telling us that, surprise, surprise, everything about our country is implicitly, even if we're not conscious of it, a European culture.
00:22:37.000Everything about some of the most basic expectations, the most basic rules, norms, standards, and expectations, they're all European.
00:23:23.000When white people cease to be the majority, when white people cease to have primacy in this country in terms of politics, culture, socially, all of these things go out the window.
00:23:35.000And this was my awakening, so to speak, when I was a conservative.
00:23:40.000When I was one of these libertarian, constitutionalist, root and tooting, libertarian conservatives, you know, whatever you want to call it, very basic, boomer type conservative, I believed in all of these things.
00:23:54.000I just simply thought that they were universal.
00:23:59.000I thought that this was a given for everybody.
00:24:01.000And what is described in this article is exactly what I was experiencing.
00:24:06.000I was so used to these expectations and so used to this culture that I wasn't even aware that it had a racial dimension to it.
00:24:17.000And like this study says, or the preambulatory part of this study says, it says that non white people are thinking about race all the time in every situation, and especially when it comes to all these things.
00:24:31.000And it was at that point when I realized the racial dimension that I realized you don't get to just have your constitution and just have your values and just have everything outlined in here.
00:24:42.000You need the people that created all these things, you need the people that live all these things, the people who created the civilization that perpetuate all these things.
00:24:53.000If you don't have those people, you won't get all these things.
00:24:57.000If these people are not setting the tone in this country, this country won't have any of these things.
00:25:03.000And as a conservative, what are you conserving if you can't conserve any of this?
00:25:09.000You know, and just to go through the list following time schedules, time being viewed as a commodity, planning for the future, delayed gratification, Christianity being the norm, English common law, Western aesthetics based on Greco Roman architecture, focusing on the British Empire and the experience of British settlers, hard work being the key to success, individualism.
00:25:32.000You know, this American creed that everybody likes to talk about that is universal and Not specific to any group.
00:25:39.000Yeah, well, all the other groups are telling us it's a white thing.
00:25:44.000That American creed that people are saying, America's an idea, can be inherited, adopted by anybody.
00:26:41.000It's like, you know, visit any one of these, you know, neighborhoods.
00:26:46.000Where this culture isn't present, and tell me this isn't true, right?
00:26:50.000So, anyway, like I said, this is just more evidence, you know, just throw on top of the heaping pile.
00:26:58.000And it's just another reminder that you cannot divorce race from any of the things that we talk about.
00:27:04.000When we talk about this culture war that's happening, the Civil War, this conflict that we all know about, everybody wants to pretend that race plays no part.
00:27:14.000It's not a factor, it means nothing, it's totally arbitrary.
00:27:17.000If other people think race is real, They're being tricked.
00:27:23.000You know, when blacks are out there and it's 85% support for BLM and 90% of them think Trump's a racist and they're smashing buildings and they're talking about how they want to kill white people, the conservatives say they're being used by George Soros.
00:27:40.000How can you continue to ignore the reality?
00:27:48.000Aspects and assumptions of whiteness and white culture.
00:27:50.000If I wrote that study, If I put out the exact same thing, I would get roundly condemned as a white supremacist.
00:27:59.000If I put out a study as a conservative, right, as somebody on the right wing, as somebody that's paleo conservative, if I put out the exact same study saying that all of these things are white culture, conservatives would be the first ones to come out and condemn me as a white supremacist.
00:28:16.000And they'd say, these are American values.
00:28:50.000And, you know, it's just par for the course.
00:28:52.000But we're going to move on and talk about the reparations study, you know, to get into another study which I find. Pretty fascinating.
00:29:02.000There's been a lot of talk, obviously, about reparations in recent years, for example, during the Democratic primary, and especially now in the past couple of months since George Floyd died at the hands of police.
00:29:14.000There's a new study that came out this week talking about the real cost of reparations.
00:29:19.000And actually, I'm just realizing that I misquoted the number earlier.
00:29:23.000It's not even $4 quadrillion, it's $6 quadrillion.
00:29:29.000So there's this new study that came out saying that if we were to calculate.
00:29:34.000The full amount that we owe to the descendants of black slaves in America as white people, the total bill would come out to $6.2 quadrillion for reparations.
00:29:47.000And I'll read you the article here going into detail about what's in the study.
00:29:52.000It says, This is from the Washington Examiner.
00:29:56.000It says, The nation's mayors on Monday backed a national call for reparations to 41 million black people, a program that could cost taxpayers $6.2 quadrillion.
00:30:12.000I should have done that to show you all the zeros.
00:30:15.000That's the next highest number after a trillion.
00:30:18.000It's 100,000 million billion trillion quadrillion.
00:30:23.000If you didn't know, it's a thousand times a trillion.
00:30:28.000And we owe six of those six quadrillion.
00:30:31.000The U.S. Conference of Mayors released a letter backing a Democratic plan to form a reparations commission to come up with a payment for slavery.
00:30:39.000The letter said, We recognize and support your legislation as a concrete first step in our larger reckoning as a nation and a next step guide to the actions of both federal and local leaders who have promised to do better by our black residents.
00:30:54.000Long at the center of the debate has been the potential price tag of paying slavery descendants, for which studies broadly include most or all of the 41 million black people in the country.
00:31:05.000A new study from three college professors said that the ultimate cost should be about $6.2 quadrillion.
00:31:14.000Quadrillion comes after trillion, and one quadrillion has 15 zeros.
00:31:21.000I think maybe we should make the payment contingent on if they can write one quadrillion on a piece of paper.
00:31:29.000Maybe we go out and we allocate all this money and we say, well, but there's just one catch.
00:31:36.000Before you accept your check for however much, you know, what's six quadrillion divided by 40 million?
00:31:43.000Before you accept your reparations check, Write on a piece of paper.
00:31:47.000Well, how many zeros are in one quadrillion?
00:31:52.000In any case, the study suggests a payment of $151 million each, and the cost to every person would be $18.96 million.
00:32:07.000The calculation is somewhat complicated, but it essentially studies the unpaid hours that slaves worked, calculates a price for massacres and discrimination, and adds an interest.
00:32:18.000It is titled, Wealth Implications of Slavery and Racial Discrimination for African American Descendants of the Enslaved.
00:32:26.000It was published last month in the Review of Black Political Economy.
00:32:31.000So I want you to keep that figure in mind that they're asking for $6.2 quadrillion when they're thinking about agricultural work, when they're talking about picking cotton and massacres.
00:32:45.000I also want you to keep in mind the fact that there's already affirmative action.
00:32:52.000And I would say maybe the greatest form of welfare of all for blacks is that they continue to reside in the United States.
00:33:00.000How does this work that they leave Africa, which is the poorest, most violent, worst continent in the world, and they come here?
00:33:10.000And now the descendants are living in America, the most sophisticated, the most complex, the most developed, richest country in the history of the world.
00:33:48.000But I want you to keep that figure in mind.
00:33:50.000Very important because I'll read you a report about how these reparations are actually starting to gain traction in a lot of cities and states in the country.
00:33:59.000So, this is an article from the New York Times.
00:34:02.000It says, as Americans debate how far the country should go to make amends for slavery and racial injustices, a conversation reawakened by the killing of George Floyd, a city in North Carolina has taken the first step.
00:34:13.000It approved reparations for black residents.
00:34:16.000The city of Asheville, North Carolina, will provide funding to programs geared towards increasing home ownership and business and career opportunities for black residents as part of a reparations initiative.
00:34:28.000The measure was unanimously approved by the Asheville City Council on Tuesday night.
00:34:33.000But it stopped short of stipulating direct payments, which are usually associated with reparations.
00:34:39.000City leaders said that their goal was to help create generational wealth for black people who have been hurt by income, educational, and health care disparities.
00:34:48.000The momentum for reparations was not limited to Asheville.
00:34:52.000In Providence, Rhode Island, the mayor signed an executive order on Wednesday to commence a truth telling and reparations process, according to the Providence Journal.
00:35:01.000In California, a bill creating a task force to develop reparations proposals.
00:35:06.000For African Americans was passed in the Assembly in June and was being considered by the Senate.
00:35:12.000But some said that the reparations initiative by city leaders in Asheville did not go far enough.
00:35:28.000It says William Darity, a professor of public policy at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, wrote in an email on Wednesday, That he was, quote, deeply skeptical about local or piecemeal actions to address various forms of racial inequality being labeled reparations.
00:35:47.000Because, of course, it's not reparations unless black people are getting cut a check.
00:35:53.000Billions, trillions of dollars in wasted money trying to develop slums and ghettos, not reparations.
00:36:02.000It's not reparations unless black people are getting cut a check that they can go and cash and go and spend at the mall, right?
00:36:11.000For reparations to be effective, he wrote, they would have to close the pre tax ratio wealth disparity in the United States, which would cost about $10 to $12 trillion, three to four times more than total state and municipal spending.
00:36:28.000Keep in mind, $10 to $12 trillion, this is roughly half of our GDP.
00:36:34.000He writes, So piecemeal reparations taken singly or collectively at those levels of government, Cannot meet the debt for American racial injustice.
00:36:45.000So, at once they're telling us reparations cost quadrillions of dollars.
00:36:50.000At the same time, we see that these proposals are gaining traction in various forms in Rhode Island, California, North Carolina.
00:36:58.000There's even a bill that's being proposed in the Congress to look into reparations.
00:37:03.000This is going to become very real in this decade, this discussion about reparations.
00:37:09.000And as I said earlier, I want you to keep in mind that 6.2 quadrillion number, and I want you to keep in mind the operative phrase never enough, because that's the story on reparations.
00:37:21.000No matter how much we do, no matter what laws we pass, regulations, rules that are aimed at uplifting black people or underprivileged, underserved, whatever communities, it's never going to be enough.
00:37:37.000A hundred million, a hundred billion, a hundred trillion, six quadrillion, it will never be enough.
00:37:45.000No matter what we give to the black community, it will always be deemed insufficient, either morally to pay back the debt for slavery.
00:37:55.000No matter how much money we give, do you think they're ever going to say, okay, we're good?
00:38:01.000I'm no longer aggrieved about something that happened 200 years ago or Jim Crow.
00:38:06.000We're now equal, and I'm ready to be treated as an equal, responsible citizen.
00:38:14.000That original sin, blood on our history, all this dramatic, melodramatic talk about what happened hundreds of years ago will always be there, no matter how much money.
00:38:27.000And additionally, not only will they make that moral case, but they'll also make the economic case.
00:38:32.000No matter how much money we give, it'll never be effective.
00:38:37.000Open up a new hospital, new schools, more money to public services, defunding the police, straight up cutting checks to people.
00:38:45.000And they'll always say, well, it actually just falls short.
00:38:48.000There will always be a professor, always an agitator, an activist, a politician that will say, well, I happen to believe that whatever the latest.
00:38:58.000Reparations proposal was just doesn't go far enough.
00:39:46.000And when it comes to the monuments, well, we'll take down the Confederate flag in South Carolina and we'll take down the statue of Jefferson Lane.
00:40:19.000And no matter what concessions we will give to these people, it won't change that fact.
00:40:23.000They will keep coming back for more until there's nothing left.
00:40:27.000And even then, they'll be picking at the scraps, picking away at the bones.
00:40:32.000And this has been proven in the past 60 years.
00:40:35.000In the past 60 years, we have moved every year towards more wokeness, more understanding, more tolerance and acceptance, and more equality.
00:40:52.000Since the 1950s or the 1960s, variously, whatever year you want to pin it on, but at some point in those two decades, you could say that legitimate hostility towards or prejudice against blacks in this country started to go down.
00:41:07.000You could say that was the Civil Rights Act or the Voting Rights Act, whatever you want to say.
00:41:12.000But we can all agree that in the past 50 or 60 years, 70 years, that race relations, or rather, I should say, that equality, we've been making greater strides every year than the year before that.
00:41:26.000And at the same time, race relations have gotten worse in exactly the same way.
00:41:31.000As we have made concessions, as equality and wokeness and tolerance has been promoted, race relations have soured and gotten worse and more militant and more aggressive.
00:41:44.000The year is 2020, we had a black president.
00:41:47.000We're in a country where you can't say anything negative about black people.
00:41:50.000We've got black billionaires, black millionaires, black athletes, black politicians, black Rav stars, black celebrities.
00:41:59.000No shortage of opportunities for blacks in colleges and employment through affirmative action and other diversity programs through HR departments.
00:42:13.000Is anybody pacified by this or satisfied?
00:42:17.000Or are we seeing a black community that is more militant and enraged and radical and demanding than ever?
00:42:26.000To me, the trend line is pretty clear.
00:42:28.000The correlation and the causation is very rock solid.
00:42:33.000And it's that if you're appeasing people that are hostile, appeasing people, they're only going to get more emboldened.
00:42:40.000It's like when you go to the forest preserve, it's like when you go to the lake or any nature preservation and they tell you, you know, don't feed the ducks.
00:42:50.000And, you know, don't get me wrong, I'm by no means equating people to animals or anything like that, but the premise is the same.
00:43:01.000That's exactly what we're talking about.
00:43:04.000Feed the ducks and they come back for more.
00:43:05.000They surround your car, they chase you.
00:43:08.000Is that now what's happening right now?
00:43:10.000So the answer is there will be no reparations.
00:43:12.000There will be no more statues being taken down.
00:43:15.000There will be no more names changed, no more holidays changed, country upturned, overturned to satisfy and appease people that are not happy here.
00:43:27.000You're either with us or you're against us.
00:43:30.000You're either with America or you're against America.
00:43:34.000You're either with the United States of America, founded and established on the 4th of July in 1776 by George Washington and the other founding fathers, with the Declaration of Independence written by Thomas Jefferson, and the pioneers and the settlers and explorers that discovered and built this country over the past three centuries.
00:43:55.000And that includes its architecture, its culture, its work ethic.
00:43:59.000It's aesthetics, it's mannerisms, and everything about it, or you can get lost and you can go somewhere else.
00:44:07.000And if you want to stay in this country, fine.
00:45:26.000It's time for people to wake up and realize that.
00:45:28.000And, you know, if you're on board with the country and you love the country, then you have to know what the country is and not hate it, not hate everything about it.
00:45:36.000Not disrespecting, which is what's happening here.
00:46:00.000And we should adopt, I think, a reciprocal posture, a reciprocal posture towards all these demands of our people and our country.
00:46:09.000And to me, as far as I'm concerned, of course, slavery was wrong.
00:46:13.000Of course, the chattel, involuntary slavery of millions of people is immoral.
00:46:20.000But there have been a lot of immoralities in history.
00:46:24.000And are we going to pay reparations to every person, every individual in this country that suffered an indignity at the hands of the government or at the hands of a prejudiced person?
00:46:34.000When are white people getting their reparations from Native Americans who scalped?
00:46:39.000And skinned and beheaded and set on fire all the settlers in the 17th and 18th and 19th centuries?
00:46:48.000When are the Italians going to get reparations from the government for the hangings?
00:46:52.000When are the Irish going to get reparations and the Chinese and on and on and on?
00:46:56.000When are Europeans going to get reparations from Muslims for their conquest of Spain and Eastern Europe?
00:47:03.000I mean, you know, if we were to go back in time and look at every injustice, every Whatever, every grievance that one group might have against another based on world history would be impossible.
00:47:16.000We all exited history, you know, arguably 30 years ago.
00:48:18.000But if the government gives reparations to Kanye West, right, or if the government gives reparations to 40 million black people, where do they get the money?
00:48:28.000Well, they have to raise it through taxes.
00:48:30.000Presumably, they would raise it through taxes on white people because white people were the perpetrators of slavery.
00:48:36.000There are some other notable groups, too.
00:48:38.000But presumably, it'll come from white people.
00:48:41.000So the government's going to take white people's money and give it to black people.
00:48:51.000So let's say you work for eight hours a day, five days a week, you know, for three months, and you come up with a certain figure, and that is the amount of money that the government takes from you and gives to blacks.
00:49:05.000So, you're working, in other words, in those months that you earn that money that will be the reparations payment, you work for free.
00:49:14.000If I do three months worth of shows and the government takes all the money that I earn from those shows and gives it to blacks, it means that I was working for free that whole time.
00:49:24.000And actually, it's not quite true that I was working for free, working without pay, because I worked and got money, but the money was taken away.
00:49:55.000You will be enslaved to black people for the first two months out of the year.
00:49:59.000The first one month, whatever the earnings are for each individual person paying the reparations, that month is the month that you're working for the black man to repay your debt for slavery.
00:50:10.000So, the solution for slavery, more slavery.
00:51:09.000But we're going to move on and talk about our featured story here, which is about the coronavirus.
00:51:14.000A little bit less interesting in my opinion, but still relevant.
00:51:18.000So, we're going to go over what's happening with the virus at this point.
00:51:22.000And, you know, the reason why I wanted to talk about this tonight is because the big headline lately and the big story about the country is that coronavirus is resurgent.
00:51:34.000There's the second wave, and it's catastrophic.
00:51:39.000That now all the governors that open their states are now going to have to close them back down.
00:51:44.000Specifically, Texas, Florida, all these Republican states that decided to let people leave their homes.
00:51:51.000Now, coronavirus is surging and this is going to be the end of the world.
00:51:57.000So, we have to cancel the election and we have to bring back all the lockdown orders.
00:52:04.000Whereas I've seen this narrative, I've seen this headline every day for the past few months, and they're trying to spook the markets, they're trying to force the hands of the government to do more, they're trying to crash the economy.
00:52:17.000None of this is backed up by any of the data.
00:52:23.000And I think they are deliberately trying to crash the market.
00:52:25.000I don't think there's any end to this other than to scare people and scare a certain group of people, which might be investors or government officials.
00:52:33.000And I'll tell you what I mean by this.
00:52:34.000There was some new data that came out, some new science that came out about the coronavirus.
00:52:40.000And the new research suggests that everything that we know about coronavirus is basically wrong.
00:52:47.000As far as the herd immunity threshold, as far as the death rate goes, and many other aspects of the virus.
00:52:54.000And what I mean by this is that what we were told initially is that we had to shut down the country because we needed to flatten the curve.
00:53:07.000It's going to burn through the population one way or the other, but we need to lock down the country so that we can prepare our healthcare system for this pandemic to hit our country, right?
00:53:19.000We're going to have this huge spike because, you know, obviously it went undetected for a long time in the United States.
00:53:26.000So we're going to take three weeks, put everybody in their homes, prevent transmission of the virus, and that way that'll prevent our healthcare system from being overburdened from the first spike.
00:53:35.000And help us prepare for a future spike or to prepare to deal with this for a few years.
00:53:41.000We need to shut down the country fundamentally to prevent the healthcare system from being overburdened and to prepare for future waves.
00:53:51.000Temporarily shut down the country because of resources, essentially.
00:53:56.000Not to wait out the virus, not to wait for a treatment, not to wait for a vaccine, anything like that.
00:54:01.000They said we need to shut down the country to prepare.
00:54:04.000Shut down the country to prevent the healthcare system from being overburdened.
00:54:07.000Totally collapsed by millions of sick people because of this pandemic.
00:54:13.000And then the goalposts shifted and they said, well, now we need to shut down the country indefinitely because we need to wait for a vaccine.
00:54:18.000We need to wait for herd immunity or something like this.
00:54:21.000And the important point to illustrate is that there's only a few ways that we can effectively stop the virus.
00:54:27.000You can't stop the virus by waiting in your house.
00:54:29.000You can't stop the virus by, you know, getting like a flu shot or anything like that.
00:54:35.000The way that you prevent the virus is by developing immunity.
00:54:38.000And there's only really two ways that you do that.
00:54:40.000You either develop a vaccine and you have mass vaccination.
00:54:45.000You have to develop a vaccine that is effective.
00:54:47.000You have to manufacture hundreds of millions of doses of that.
00:54:52.000And then you've got to administer the vaccine to hundreds of millions of people.
00:54:56.000And that's option one that someone can develop immunity and then the virus cannot be transmitted and then therefore cannot kill people.
00:55:04.000The other way is through herd immunity.
00:55:06.000And the idea behind herd immunity is that enough people will get it that the virus cannot spread.
00:55:13.000Because the people that have not gotten the virus but are still vulnerable to it will be surrounded by the herd of people that have already gotten the virus and are therefore immune.
00:55:23.000The virus is so transmissible because it's something that allegedly nobody has an immunity to.
00:55:29.000And so that means everybody's susceptible to getting it.
00:55:32.000So anybody that comes in contact with a sick person might be a symptomatic or asymptomatic carrier.
00:55:37.000But if such a certain percentage of the population has already had the virus, then you've got large amounts of people, herds of people that act basically as a shield.
00:55:47.000For the people that have not gotten it.
00:55:49.000And therefore, you achieve an effective level of immunity if enough people have gotten the virus.
00:55:54.000So, the vaccine, we don't even know if you can develop a vaccine because vaccines are notoriously tricky when it comes to viruses.
00:56:02.000There have been few effective vaccines against diseases like this.
00:56:06.000So, we've been looking at herd immunity.
00:56:08.000If it's a race against the clock for a vaccine, then the next best approach and the only other approach is to see how many people it would take, what percentage of the population it would take to achieve herd immunity, to achieve a natural immunity.
00:56:22.000By just letting the virus run its course effectively.
00:56:26.000And all of the decisions up until now were based on the assumption that the herd immunity threshold was 70 to 80%.
00:56:35.000In other words, we were led to believe, and all the decisions about lockdowns and regulations and so on, travel bans, all of that was made on the assumption that you needed 70 to 80% of the population to get sick, which means, you know, if you're talking about a country of 300 million people, then you're talking about hundreds of millions of people that have to get sick in order for us to achieve even close to an effective herd immunity,
00:57:05.000which would involve millions of people dying.
00:57:07.000That would involve Of obviously hundreds of millions getting sick and then millions dying to get that 70 to 80% herd immunity.
00:57:15.000And it was based on that that the government has been telling us we need to lock everything down.
00:57:19.000We need to shut down the society because herd immunity is going to be catastrophic.
00:57:25.000We have to stop and slow down the transmission to wait for a vaccine.
00:57:29.000But there's new research now that suggests that the herd immunity threshold is not 80% or 70% or even 50%, but it's actually closer to 10 or 20% of the population.
00:57:42.000And in some places like New York City, we've actually already reached that threshold, meaning that New York City is already effectively immune from the virus.
00:57:51.000And I'll read to you this is a report about this.
00:57:56.000It says, In the early days, some public health officials speculated that coronavirus herd immunity threshold was 70%.
00:58:05.000Obviously, the difference between a HIT of 70% and an HIT of 10 to 20% is dramatic.
00:58:12.000And the lower the HIT, the quicker a virus will burn out.
00:58:15.000As it loses the ability to infect more people, which is exactly what coronavirus is doing everywhere, including the U.S., which is why the death rate is going down.
00:58:25.000Scientists from Oxford, Virginia Tech, and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine all recently explained that the HIT of coronavirus in this paper.
00:58:36.000It says, We search the literature for estimates of individual variation in propensity to acquire or transmit coronavirus or other infectious diseases.
00:58:45.000And overlaid the findings as vertical lines in one of these figures in the paper.
00:58:50.000Most CV estimates are comprised between 2 and 4, a range where naturally acquired immunity to coronavirus may place populations over the herd immunity threshold.
00:59:04.000Once as few as 10 to 20 percent of its individuals are immune.
00:59:09.000Calculations from this study of data in Stockholm showed a herd immunity threshold of 17 percent.
00:59:16.000So you've got multiple studies from Oxford, Virginia Tech, Liverpool.
00:59:20.000A lot of the science talk is over my head, admittedly.
00:59:24.000But you've got multiple studies, and studies even from Sweden that show that the HIT or the herd immunity threshold is between 10 and 20%.
00:59:34.000Meaning, again, you only need 17% of the population to get the virus before the society is effectively immune.
00:59:41.000And at that point, when the society is immune, you can return to your normal lives.
00:59:46.000You can stop wearing masks, even stop with the hand sanitizer, the social distancing, because you're at the point where The virus is not easily transmitted.
00:59:56.000It doesn't mean that the virus goes away, but it does mean that the virus does not pose a threat to massively infect the population.
01:00:03.000More than that, we've also discovered that up to 81% of coronavirus in New York, the figure is 21%.
01:00:11.000At the beginning of the crisis, on the other hand, Sir Patrick Valance, the chief scientific advisor, suggested that at least 60% of the population would have to be infected in order to achieve herd immunity.
01:00:24.000Not according to a team from Sweden's.
01:00:27.000Karolinska Institute, which has found that 30% of Swedish blood donors in May this year were found to have an immune response to coronavirus in their T cells.
01:00:37.000Those are white blood cells that are an essential part of the immune system.
01:00:41.000Remarkably, many of these people had no detectable antibodies, suggesting that their T cells had fought off the disease without any need to produce antibodies.
01:00:50.000In all, they say roughly twice as many people had a T cell reaction than had measurable levels of antibodies.
01:00:59.000This provides a possible explanation for why the coronavirus epidemic seems to have died away in many places once it had infected around 20% of the local population.
01:01:10.000If people are developing some kind of immunity to coronavirus through their T cells, then it could mean that a far higher percentage of the population has been exposed to coronavirus than previously thought.
01:01:22.000Antibodies and T cells combined, it is conceivable that some places, such as London or New York, are already.
01:01:30.000At or near the 60% infection level required to achieve herd immunity.
01:01:37.000So we're getting to the point where we're realizing that virtually all the data, everything that we knew about coronavirus, or we were told, I should say, about coronavirus a few months ago, is wrong.
01:01:49.000The death rate that they told us was wrong, the herd immunity threshold that they told us was wrong, the numbers about the antibodies was wrong because of T cells.
01:02:01.000Everything, every single thing that they told us and continue to tell us about the coronavirus is a lie.
01:02:09.000And this is what I said the other day.
01:02:11.000You know, somebody was asking me about the coronavirus spiking in Florida, and I said, it's nonsense.
01:02:17.000Without even looking at the data, I can tell you that it is fictional and made up.
01:02:21.000And the reason for that is because since March, you've seen the cases have skyrocketed, gone down, and now they're going back up again.
01:02:31.000But if you look at the death rate, the death rate has gone down every single week.
01:02:36.000With an exception, I think, in the past couple of weeks, since April.
01:02:40.000So while the number of cases continues to skyrocket, and you have all this fear mongering about record high coronavirus cases, a second wave is hitting our shores, and we need to return to lockdowns and so on, the death rate is collapsing.
01:02:55.000And at that point, what are you really concerned about?
01:02:58.000If people are getting sick because you're finally testing them and you're finally clocking everybody that has the virus, but the death rate is Has dropped every single week for the past three or four months.
01:03:14.000I saw some study the other day or a report, I think, from a mainstream media source that said that it doesn't matter that coronavirus deaths are falling.
01:03:27.000Isn't the whole point of all of this, of the lockdowns, the shutdowns, the rules, social distancing to prevent people from dying?
01:03:35.000Aren't we led to believe that if we don't wear a mask in Walmart, that that is A grave sin because we're putting people's lives in jeopardy?
01:03:44.000Well, how are we doing that if the death rate is not 7%, like some had said, or even 3%, but it's actually closer to 0.3%, which is not much different than the flu?
01:03:56.000How are we supposed to believe that when the herd immunity threshold has already been passed?
01:04:03.000How are we supposed to believe that when we know now that probably 30 to 80% of the population may already be able to become immune?
01:04:11.000Without antibodies, but just because of their T cells, because we are used to fighting off coronavirus infections and maybe not the novel coronavirus, but other coronaviruses.
01:04:23.000And that leads me to the conclusion that this is a media created pandemic.
01:04:29.000And I didn't believe that at first initially because I thought that it's actually very likely, and I still believe it's very likely that a real pandemic could occur and it would absolutely come from China.
01:04:40.000And it's absolutely possible and probably likely within our lifetimes that we will see a real, deadly, catastrophic pandemic.
01:04:51.000I think at this point, what it has become.
01:04:54.000And maybe what it was from the start was a way to derail the Trump administration.
01:04:59.000It was meant as a way to derail Trump's candidacy, fake the election, crash the economy.
01:05:05.000And maybe there's some end game in other areas.
01:05:09.000I think that maybe the most superficial explanation, the most surface level explanation, is that you had a lot of liberals in media or in the administration that wanted the economy to collapse and they wanted mail in voting so that Trump would lose in 2020.
01:05:25.000I think if you were to look a little bit deeper, The other consequence of coronavirus is not just that you're going to have mail in voting.
01:05:33.000It's not just that the economy has collapsed, but it's also that mass surveillance has now achieved, like, they've made leaps and bounds since the coronavirus started.
01:05:45.000This contact tracing stuff has been like opening the floodgates, probably more than anything since the Patriot Act, to government spying, to spying by massive tech companies and private corporations.
01:06:01.000They're telling us that in order for you to return to work, you may have to get a vaccine, which is mandatory, get an immunity passport.
01:06:10.000And in addition to all of that, they're saying that, and this has already happened, they need to implement really thorough contact tracing, which means that they need to track every single human being in the population, where they go, and who they get into contact with, and where and when and at what times, and match that data to your identity.
01:06:30.000Previously, everybody knew where you were at all.
01:06:32.000Times, you know, they have your geolocation data, but it was metadata.
01:06:40.000You know, my location information, I'm sure it exists somewhere, but for a lot of these companies and for the government, it was just kind of thrown into this general pool of everybody's locations and whereabouts.
01:06:51.000But the contact tracing with Bluetooth technology is now embedded in the software of your phone.
01:06:56.000It's in your operating software, right, or your operating system, and it is using Bluetooth to track you and your name.
01:07:05.000And everyone else's names and all the other people you come into contact with.
01:07:09.000And that data is then made available to public health officials who God knows who that is.
01:07:16.000Local governments, police, and a variety of other people.
01:07:19.000So is it the end game for mass surveillance, mass vaccination, mass population control, get people on a registry?
01:07:27.000Was the end game to destroy the American economy?
01:07:31.000If you look at the market share of Amazon since the coronavirus pandemic was announced in March or February, Look at the overall stock market and what happened when coronavirus hit, and then look at Amazon and look at Walmart and look at the other big tech companies.
01:07:48.000And I wonder when all is said and done, how much of the market share of the entire economy was gobbled up by a handful of corporations like Walmart and Amazon because all these lockdown orders destroyed almost every small business in the country.
01:08:03.000Virtually all of them were seriously harmed, and they say that roughly 20% of them will never come back.
01:08:10.000They'll go out of business and they'll just be permanently retired.
01:08:13.000So I don't know exactly what the end game is.
01:08:16.000It's difficult to parse it out because there have been so many horrible consequences where it's been government and big tech and other forms of overreach that it's difficult to say.
01:08:28.000There's an incentive because there's nothing in this data, there's nothing in what they've done or said in the past six months that has made any sense, that has been consistent, that has been truthful.
01:08:40.000You know, you talk about China and the World Health Organization lying, it's the CDC and Fauci and the White House and the mainstream media that are peddling all of this.
01:08:53.000And in this country, they're talking about reversing all of the reopenings of the different states and putting everybody on hard lockdown again and all this scaremongering and so on.
01:09:03.000Meanwhile, deaths have been the lowest they've ever been from coronavirus.
01:09:08.000And curiously, all of that right before the election, I don't know.
01:09:17.000The other reason I know it's not real is because investors don't think it's real.
01:09:20.000And investors, unlike the media, actually have to put their money where their mouth is.
01:09:25.000If investors are way too bullish about the prospects of coronavirus getting better and reopenings and everything, and that doesn't actualize, then they lose their money.
01:09:40.000In other words, when you're looking at the stock market, the stock market is looking at the recovery based on to what extent consumption is going to pick up, imports and exports are going to pick up, trade is going to resume.
01:09:54.000You know, the reason that the economy crashed because of coronavirus is because, you know, people are not driving, which means that, you know, people are not buying gas.
01:10:09.000Trade and the volume of cargo ships coming in is diminished because it's affecting all these other countries.
01:10:15.000So, the extent to which the stock market is going up is the extent to which investors believe that economic activity will pick back up.
01:10:22.000And economic activity cannot pick back up if there's a Catastrophic second or third or fourth wave of coronavirus.
01:10:29.000So, insofar as investors are saying, we don't care about all the scaremongering about coronavirus, they're putting their money on the line and saying, yeah, I mean, we do believe that the economy is going to come back, and now I'm willing to stake my portfolio on this.
01:10:44.000People in the media and people in the government face no consequence for lying.
01:10:49.000You know, they say coronavirus record highs, and they don't lose any money.
01:10:54.000In some ways, they get more money by printing sensational, exaggerated lies that liberals want to hear.
01:11:01.000So, I look at the market, and that was my first indication, not my only, but my first indication is I looked at the markets for the past few weeks and I saw all this stuff about, oh, second wave, it's catastrophic, game over.
01:11:46.000I've been traveling, I've been driving around, I've been just getting more and more bold just to see what'll happen.
01:11:53.000I go to the gas station, I pump my gas, and then I go to McDonald's, and then I eat a hamburger, and I don't wash my hands, and I don't social distance.
01:12:01.000You know, and that's probably not healthy to begin with.
01:12:03.000That's probably gross to begin with because, you know, the ubiquity of fecal matter and other, you know, germs.
01:12:11.000I mean, that is already there to begin with.
01:12:13.000But at this point, I'm like, fuck your mask and your hand sanitizer.
01:12:18.000I'm going to be less hygienic than I normally would just to prove a point.
01:15:04.000I would get in and I was an inspector, so I would look at packages and I would open up the packages.
01:15:13.000It was different tasks every day, but I would separate out pieces that were broken or had issues with them.
01:15:20.000I remember there was one time when this order was shipped back because all the boxes were broken.
01:15:27.000For whatever reason, they were shipped in these boxes that.
01:15:31.000They had no structural integrity, so they just like totally collapsed.
01:15:35.000They were like wet and broken and were like ripped apart.
01:15:38.000So, my job was literally to take each of these soggy, destroyed boxes, empty them out, and then repackage them in a new box, tape it up, put it on a pallet.
01:15:48.000Take a box, empty it out, put it back in a new box, tape it up, put it on a pallet.
01:15:53.000And there were like thousands of these boxes.
01:18:08.000Individualism and collectivism is a fake dichotomy, it has no real meaning.
01:18:14.000And people have said individualism and collectivism, this libertarian thing, and I used to buy into that, but this has been talked about for decades.
01:18:24.000The difference between the Soviets and Americans is collectivism versus individualism.
01:18:28.000But it's like we're not an individualist society.
01:18:32.000I mean, we protect the rights of the individual, certainly, but the society is not comprised of individuals.
01:18:40.000The society is comprised of families and communities.
01:18:43.000You know, there are these social structures that define our way of life and they define who we are.
01:18:50.000We define ourselves in relation to these different social structures, to these different collectives.
01:18:56.000You need to define yourself in relation to your immediate family and to your extended family.
01:19:00.000You define yourself in relation to your community, your workplace, your friend group, your fraternity, your social group, whatever it is, your neighborhood, your city, your state, your country.
01:19:15.000Our identity is comprised of these intersecting and overlapping different levels of group identity.
01:19:22.000So the idea that you could separate it out and say, oh, it's the group versus the individual, a collective versus an individual, it's wrong.
01:19:31.000I mean, in the Soviet Union, what is a Soviet?
01:19:34.000Does anybody even know what a Soviet is?
01:19:37.000It's the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
01:19:39.000A Soviet, you know, back in the early 20th century was, and, you know, it's been a long time since I looked into the Cold War stuff, but correct me if I'm wrong.
01:19:49.000A Soviet was like a union or like a workers' council.
01:19:54.000It was supposed to be these autonomous and different, like, worker collectives.
01:19:59.000And, you know, to me, the basis of the Soviet Union or of communism was these, you know, worker co ops or unions or worker owned factories or worker governed towns or villages.
01:20:12.000But how is this really any different from your local government?
01:20:16.000How is this really, in a meaningful way, different than any other mode of group identity?
01:20:23.000Of course, it's different in logistical ways and, you know, it's a different kind of an organization, but.
01:20:30.000You know, the point being is that they've got a collective over there, but it's hardly different from our collectives over here.
01:20:35.000And the collectives might be qualitatively different in that it's egalitarian over there and it's total equality and things like that.
01:20:42.000But, you know, just the same here, we have collectives, we have groups.
01:20:48.000They're just maybe more hierarchical, and, you know, maybe the individual has more of an individuated identity.
01:20:55.000But, you know, I've always said that that is a false dichotomy.
01:20:59.000We, if anything, we need more collectivism in America.
01:21:44.00050% of the reason I watch the show is to hear you rip into Wignats.
01:21:49.000Is there any way to weaponize those people to do something good for the cause?
01:21:53.000Well, you know, if you want to know the truth, I think they weaponize themselves because, I mean, by virtue of them hating us, we can always, you know, use that to our advantage and say, see, see, you know, these guys who are.
01:22:25.000So I remember like one time Richard Spencer tweeted and he said, I think one of his fans said, Well, isn't Nick Fuentes a white nationalist too?
01:22:37.000And Richard Spencer was like, You know, Nick Fuentes has never been a white nationalist.
01:27:25.000I'm sure it's some retard working there who's trying to mess me up deliberately.
01:27:32.000Elected Groypers as normie conservatives defending the Washington Redskins name is so cringe, always falling into the trap of honoring Native American culture.
01:27:41.000BLM is literally taking over, and the best we can do is defend minorities.
01:27:56.000So, a collective of Silicon Valley giants successfully appealed on the basis that a lawsuit would open the entire industry to litigation for their patterns of bad behavior.
01:29:35.000I got mad a long time ago, and, you know, I'm like, you know, don't get me wrong, I have righteous indignation, but am I in a constant state of anger?
01:29:48.000Am I in an emotional state of anger because of what's happening?
01:32:27.000But growing up, I always had this anxiety or this insecurity that, you know, like, am I, when the rubber meets the road, am I going to be able to execute and make something of myself?
01:32:39.000Because I would always hear about older kids, older boys who were, you know, doing something.
01:32:46.000You know, like, I remember being in grade school and I would always hear about, it's actually ironic, my, or not ironic, but it's actually interesting.
01:32:56.000One of my former business partners, the other partner, when me and James Alsup had a business, the third partner was this guy, somebody I knew from grade school from my hometown.
01:33:09.000Or actually, he was, I think he was only a year older than me, but he was like the talk of the town because he skipped a couple grades.
01:33:17.000He skipped two grades in grade school, and he was a student council president.
01:33:22.000You know, I would hear my parents talk about that and say, oh, wow, you know, this.
01:33:26.000I don't want to say his name, but this guy, he's got two grades, and wow, he's a student council president.
01:33:31.000I heard he's doing, and then, you know, in high school, talking about, like, oh, I heard so and so is in Model UN, and then they go to these trips, and it's really cool.
01:33:40.000And then I was in high school and hearing about, oh, you know, this person's doing really well in college.
01:33:44.000And I was always very, like, anxious about that.
01:33:49.000Like, you know, when I get to that, when I get those opportunities as an older person with more responsibilities, am I going to be doing cool, successful things?
01:34:00.000You know, am I, how am I going to do that?
01:34:02.000Because I have, you know, when I was in school, I was like, I have no idea how I'm going to get to that next step.
01:34:08.000I have no idea how I'm going to get to that next level.
01:34:10.000Because I wasn't old enough, you know, to do a lot of those things.
01:34:16.000I was just a step behind, right, in the sense that I would look at somebody a few years older than me and say, I don't even know, I don't even understand what they're doing.
01:34:23.000Because I'm, you know, I'm in like fourth grade.
01:34:25.000I don't even know what's going on with that.
01:34:27.000And I was worried that when I got to that point, would I be able to figure it out?
01:34:30.000So, I would probably be relieved 10 years old looking at me now, like, yeah, you figured it out.
01:36:32.000The problem with free trade, you know that free trade is stupid because if there is any ideology or there is any worldview which says that there is an easy, simple answer to every problem, you know that it's wrong.
01:36:47.000And what I mean by that is when it comes to free trade, what they're telling us is that because of these economic laws, free trade works.
01:36:58.000Everywhere, all the time, for every country, in every instance, no matter what.
01:37:04.000And nobody is worse off because of it.
01:41:14.000So, you know, because if it was just me, what I love about me is that if I have to get something done, I don't have to worry about it because I just take care of business.
01:41:24.000And I can rely on myself and do things on my own pace, but then I start to delegate to other people, and it's like, I gotta deal with them, I gotta deal with their bullshit, and I gotta just, you know, carry on.
01:41:37.000So I don't wanna name any names in particular, but it's just like, you know, working with people, working with like large amounts of people is just so grating sometimes.
01:41:51.000And I work with a lot of great people, but it's just the exposure, the constant exposure to just like this grind of like, You know, now I got to talk to this person, I got to tell this person, and I got to deal with this problem and that problem, and I got to call this person.
01:42:08.000I got to wait to hear back from this one and that one.
01:42:11.000I just wish I could handle everything.
01:42:13.000And I was only talking to people to get lunch, you know, only talking to people about, I don't even know why, talking to them about Star Wars or gaming.
01:42:21.000But it's just a constant, like, you know, so.
01:42:25.000And then I deal with the super chatters, thousands and thousands of super chatters and viewers, and people give me a hard time on Twitter.
01:42:39.000Base Batman says America conquered Texas through immigration, where white Americans moved to Mexican Texas and retrained and retained their own identity, so they seceded and joined America.
01:42:50.000Same is happening today with Mexican immigrants.
01:43:37.000Based train says you can't be frank or you can be frank, but only if I can be anus 12.
01:43:44.000Epic Swag says the Washington Examiner article, simply put, is extreme sensationalism.
01:43:50.000The figure, as noted in the piece, is derived by calculating time worked by all slaves, factoring in current minimum wage, and adjusting for inflation encompassing hundreds of years.
01:46:11.000Bill Clinton says, there's a thought on DLive called Brie Teres, who's making lots of money by restreaming you while she gets her boobs out.
01:46:20.000She's also criticizing you and says Ben Shapiro is her favorite conservative.
01:48:26.000Jonas Slav says, Do you think it's possible Viacom fired Cannon because of what he said about white people, but that acknowledging that was the reason it would have been stigmatized?
01:52:36.000I mean, I don't like to use this appeal, but it's totally true that.
01:52:41.000I mean, leftists, what they say they care about, if they really cared about it, they'd be on our side.
01:52:47.000Like women, women are so miserable and victimized by the current system, raped and abused and preyed upon, and just ultimately made miserable and taken for a ride because of capitalism and because of the free market and feminism and equality.
01:53:08.000I mean, I don't like to make that appeal like we're the real feminists because, I mean, we're not feminists, but we are the ones looking out for the well being of women.
01:54:05.000How do they treat you not wearing a mask at the airport?
01:54:09.000Well, I wore a mask on the airplane, but I didn't wear a mask in the airport, and they didn't mind.
01:54:15.000I mean, they only required you to wear a mask actually on the airplane, which I didn't mind, honestly, because.
01:54:23.000I think you get sick on an airplane no matter what because you're on an airplane and you're breathing the same air for two, three, four hours as everybody else.
01:54:32.000I have to imagine that's already a petri dish.
01:54:35.000So I actually didn't mind it much on the airplane and I wore it there.
01:54:40.000I took it off for pretty big swaths of time on the flight, but walking through the airport, they didn't give me a hard time.
01:54:48.000When I left the airplane, when I was like deplaning, I took my mask off and the lady was like, Excuse me, sir, can you please put your mask back on?
01:57:05.000That, you know, you look at politicians and George Floyd and protesters.
01:57:13.000And the rules clearly don't matter for some people, but they do for everybody else.
01:57:16.000And normally that doesn't matter when you're going to Walmart and you have to wear a mask.
01:57:21.000When it comes to a funeral, really, you can't grieve your loved ones because of these rules that are being flouted every day by thousands of protesters and just blacks.
01:57:32.000I mean, look at how many minorities you could see in a Home Depot or Walmart without their masks, and nobody gives them a hard time.
01:57:38.000You know, or politicians that will travel and fly to and from and get their haircuts and, you know, they go about their lives.
01:57:46.000So, I mean, that doesn't matter, like I said, when you're going about your day to day life, but then they tell you, oh, you can't have a funeral.
01:59:30.000I would have preferred the data entry if I'm being honest.
01:59:33.000Polish American Groyper says, I have stopped listening to what the media and science is telling me, stopped washing my hands, showering, brushing my teeth.
02:03:24.000Some people have an idea, but I feel like most people don't.
02:03:28.000So, in my opinion, it's much better to take a gap year.
02:03:31.000Because what ends up happening is for a lot of people, they can't handle moving out on their own.
02:03:35.000You just transition from basically having a babysitter every day for seven hours a day in school, getting told what to do and teachers on your ass and getting supervised all the time to living on your own.
02:03:49.000It's like you end up wasting a year, whether you're wasting it because you don't know what major you want or you're confused about what you want to do or you just can't handle the new responsibilities, can't handle living alone.
02:04:01.000You know, that first year, like all of that waste can be avoided if you take a gap year.
02:04:38.000You go to community college for two years, transfer to a better school, a state school or a different university, and you save boatloads of money.
02:05:13.000Going to a community college after high school, especially in my neighborhood, it's like if you were going to community college, that meant you were a loser.
02:05:20.000You know, that meant that you were like, oh, you're a burnout, you're going nowhere.
02:05:28.000So people that graduated, even though I think the most common college people went to is the community college, you graduate high school, you go to community college for two years, then you transfer into state school or whatever, and, uh, What ends up happening is you save tens of thousands of dollars and you still get the same degree anyway.
02:05:47.000So, yeah, I mean, people could say, oh, you know, people will say for two years you're in community college, but then you're not.
02:05:57.000So, yeah, people might give you a hard time or think a certain way for a couple of years.
02:06:02.000But then after those two years, you're in a school right with everybody else and in a fraction of the cost, and you'll end up getting the same degree.
02:06:08.000You probably get, it'll be easier to transfer in anyway if it's a selective school.
02:06:17.000College, there's so much crap that people are told about that.
02:06:22.000And now that I've made a living outside of college, without college, and having been to college, I feel a lot more confident telling people, you know, it's not the only way.
02:06:32.000Because when you're in high school, you're kind of, you don't really see the other side.
02:06:37.000It's not very clear what happens when you graduate from high school.
02:06:41.000And I know that because that's what happened to me.
02:06:43.000I was so in the dark about the college process.
02:06:49.000You know, it was almost like it didn't even seem real that I would ever move out and be going to school and college in another city and another state on my own.
02:10:41.000That is the essence of conservatism, not tax cuts.
02:10:44.000It's that we need God to provide meaning.
02:10:48.000We don't need God because God is real and it's true, but we need community and family and virtue and all of these things to give us meaning and to direct our lives, to have fulfilling lives.
02:10:59.000And that's what conservatism ought to be directed towards, not like more stuff.
02:12:57.000So whenever people are talking about, oh, you're poor, you know, you're going to be poor, or you've never worked a job or whatever, I mean, that is why, in my opinion, the prosperity signaling is so.
02:13:07.000Important because I mean, that is a measure of success that is just inarguable.
02:13:12.000It's something that speaks for itself.
02:13:16.000That's just, you know, being an all around baller.
02:13:19.000So when people are like, oh, he hasn't worked a real job.
02:13:22.000I remember one time, this asshole who's been on Twitter for a while, I don't want to name names, but this guy, when I launched my website, he's like, you know, I really hope that Nick makes a good chunk of change and just quits and starts a new life.
02:13:39.000And the figure that he put up was so low, I just had to laugh at it.
02:19:10.000Telling when I'm giving advice, or I'm telling people things about the world, it's based on God's rules, it's based on God's laws, it's based on a godly worldview.
02:19:21.000You know, so advice that is as simple as start a family, have kids, do not be promiscuous, do not use drugs you know, all of that is good, it is inherently and intrinsically and objectively good.
02:19:34.000So it's no wonder, you know, that a show that preaches things like that is going to have people that lead good lives.
02:19:40.000That's the recipe to living a good life to be virtuous.
02:19:43.000To be disciplined, to be thoughtful, to be humble, to be all those things, you know, to not have hubris.
02:19:50.000So, you know, a lot of shows and a lot of like subcultures on the internet, they're trying to be funny or they're trying to be cool, they're trying to be edgy.
02:19:59.000Smoke cigarettes, it's funny, you know, have sex, that's the latest meme or whatever.
02:20:05.000And, you know, even like with the alt right, a lot of meme stuff like that, drinking, drug abuse, promiscuity, etc.
02:20:27.000I obviously package that in a way that's appealing to young people.
02:20:31.000It's not in a preachy way or in like a holier than thou way, but it's just that simple.
02:20:37.000So, you know, of course, of course, America First is a movement that people are going to grow from because it's, you know, the people that are behind this movement, including and especially me, are thoughtful.
02:22:04.000No, I've never gone skiing or snowboarding.
02:22:07.000My parents aren't really into the winter sports.
02:22:10.000Con Groypers says I am so, excuse me, looking forward to the forthcoming Nick Fights the Globalist clips that will be made from the fight scene super chat tonight.
02:22:20.000Who could ever step in the ring against America first?
02:23:33.000Yeah, I mean, I appreciate you want to donate to the show, but there won't be a show if you post things that are against the rules because they're watching my live chat constantly trying to report me.
02:23:43.000So, why don't you exercise a little patience here and consideration?
02:24:02.000If you want to send me an email and tell me what you said that broke the rules and tell me your username, I can unban you if I think it's appropriate.
02:24:10.000But this is not the right way to go about it.
02:27:43.000Like I said, just shoot me an email, send me your username, tell me what you did, and I'll unban you if I think it's reasonable.
02:27:52.000Because I don't mean to be a jerk about the live chat, but you've got to understand that there are people that watch my live chat every night throughout the whole show, taking screenshots and sending them to the DLive team.
02:28:05.000And saying, this guy's got to get banned.
02:28:09.000So you got to keep that in mind when you're in the live chat.
02:28:13.000I don't have moderators because I like moderation.
02:28:16.000I don't have moderators because I like being a jerk or I'm being mean to you or I'm being whatever.
02:28:22.000The moderators are there because you literally have people that will sit and watch the show all night taking screenshots of the live chat and then sending them to DLive and saying, hey, look at how bad this guy is.
02:28:33.000And I know because I've seen proof that this is happening.
02:29:56.000I'm sitting out here, I'm in the city watching the cars go by, and I'm just enjoying a simple, simple pleasure, you know, simple, guilty pleasure all by myself.
02:30:10.000Nothing is better than this a refreshing beverage, a tasty burger and fries, you know.
02:31:08.000I love your old school Italian, Irish, conservative Bostonians, but the people can be very insufferable because it's a lot of educated people.
02:31:18.000And that means a lot of awfuls and immigrants.
02:31:22.000And then different classes of people that are just hostile to what we're doing.